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{{Short description|Skin condition of unknown pathology}}
'''Morgellons''' or ''Morgellons disease'' is a skin condition characterized by stinging, biting, and crawling sensations. Its existence as a distinct entity is not accepted by the medical community. There is no agreed-upon physical cause or ].
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'''Morgellons''' ({{IPAc-en|m|ɔːr|ˈ|ɡ|ɛ|l|ə|n|z}}) is the informal name of a self-diagnosed, scientifically unsubstantiated ] in which individuals have sores that they believe contain fibrous material.<ref name=Vulink2016>{{cite journal|last1=Vulink|first1=NC|title=Delusional Infestation: State of the Art.|journal=Acta Dermato-Venereologica|date=August 23, 2016|volume=96|issue=217|pages=58–63|doi=10.2340/00015555-2412|pmid=27282746|doi-access=free| issn = 0001-5555 }} {{open access}}</ref><ref name= Moriarty2019/> Morgellons is not well understood, but the general medical consensus is that it is a form of ],<ref name=Beuerlein2021>{{cite journal |vauthors=Beuerlein KG, Balogh EA, Feldman SR |title=Morgellons disease etiology and therapeutic approach: a systematic review |journal=Dermatol Online J |volume=27 |issue=8 |pages= |date=August 2021 |pmid=34755952 |doi=10.5070/D327854682 |s2cid=243939325 |url=https://escholarship.org/content/qt2md8r5ms/qt2md8r5ms.pdf}}</ref> on the psychiatric spectrum.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Aung-Din D, Sahni DR, Jorizzo JL, Feldman SR |title=Morgellons disease: insights into treatment |journal=Dermatol Online J |volume=24 |issue=11 |pages= |date=November 2018 |pmid=30695970 |doi= 10.5070/D32411041998|url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/38x1k82r|doi-access=free }}</ref> The sores are typically the result of compulsive scratching, and the fibers, when analysed, are consistently found to have originated from cotton and other textiles.<ref name= Moriarty2019/><ref name= UpToDate/>
It is frequently diagnosed as ] (DOP, or delusions of parasitosis) or ]. The most common types of visible physical evidense presented are white crystalline granules, black specks, and the blue, red & white "fibers" under the skin.


The ] in 2002 by Mary Leitao,<ref name="Gazette"/> a mother who rejected the ] of her son's delusional parasitosis. She chose the name from a letter written by a mid-17th-century physician.<ref name="psychologytoday"/><ref name="browne"/> Leitao and others involved in her Morgellons Research Foundation successfully lobbied members of the ] and the U.S. ] (CDC) to investigate the condition in 2006.<ref name="Schulte">{{Cite news | last = Schulte | first = Brigid | title = Figments of the Imagination? | newspaper = Washington Post | page = W10 | date = January 20, 2008 | access-date = June 9, 2008 | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/01/18/ST2008011801924.html}}</ref><ref name="Investigation">{{cite web |url=https://www.cdc.gov/unexplaineddermopathy/investigation.html |title=CDC Study of an Unexplained Dermopathy |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160603192900/http://www.cdc.gov/unexplaineddermopathy/|archive-date=June 3, 2016|url-status=dead|publisher=Centers For Disease Control |date=November 1, 2007 |access-date=May 9, 2011 }}</ref> CDC researchers issued the results of their multi-year study in January 2012, indicating that no disease ]s were present in the samples from the individuals examined and that the fibers found were likely cotton. The researchers concluded that the condition was "similar to more commonly recognized conditions such as delusional infestation".<ref name="CDCPLOS">{{cite journal |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0029908 |pmid=22295070 |pmc=3266263 |title=Clinical, Epidemiologic, Histopathologic and Molecular Features of an Unexplained Dermopathy |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=e29908 |year=2012 |vauthors=Pearson ML, Selby JV, Katz KA et al |bibcode=2012PLoSO...729908P |doi-access=free }} Material was copied from this source, which is available under a </ref><ref name="MSN">{{cite web |last=Aleccia |first=JoNel |title=Mystery skin disease Morgellons has no clear cause, CDC study says |date=January 25, 2012 |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/healthmain/mystery-skin-disease-morgellons-has-no-clear-cause-cdc-study-1c6436053 |publisher=NBC News |access-date=April 2, 2015}}</ref>
The diagnostic criteria for DOP includes the presenting of lintballs and scabs by a patient. However, the majority of the physical evidence in the diagnostic criteria are composed of more obvious objects such as insects, insect parts, seeds, etc. These are rarely presented by people with symptoms of Morgellons.


==Medical description==
One study points to infestation by ] organisms. Current research at the Morgellons Research Foundation, that looked at the molecular level for DNA evidence of Collembola in samples of skin and other shed material from Morgellons patients, did not find Collembola DNA; for these Morgellons patients, symptoms are not from Collembola.
Morgellons is poorly understood but the general medical consensus is that it is a form of ] in which individuals have some form of ] with sores that they believe contain fibers.<ref name=Vulink2016/><ref name=Moriarty2019>{{cite journal |vauthors=Moriarty N, Alam M, Kalus A, O'Connor K |title=Current understanding and approach to delusional infestation |journal=Am. J. Med. |volume=132 |issue=12 |pages=1401–1409 |date=December 2019 |pmid=31295443 |doi=10.1016/j.amjmed.2019.06.017 |s2cid=195893551 |type=Review}}</ref><ref name=UpToDate>{{cite web |author= Suh KN |date= June 7, 2018 |title= Delusional infestation: Epidemiology, clinical presentation, assessment and diagnosis |work= UpToDate |publisher= Wolters Kluwer|url= https://www.uptodate.com/contents/delusional-infestation-epidemiology-clinical-presentation-assessment-and-diagnosis/print |access-date= March 8, 2020}}</ref><ref name=Cutis2012>{{cite journal|last1=Halvorson|first1=CR|title=An approach to the evaluation of delusional infestation.|journal=Cutis|date=October 2012|volume=90|issue=4|pages=E1–E4|pmid=24005827}}</ref> Its presentation is very similar to delusional parasitosis, with the addition that people with the condition believe there are inanimate objects in their skin lesions. An active online community supports the notion that it is an infectious disease, disputes that it is psychological, and proposes an association with ]. Controversy has resulted; publications "largely from a single group of investigators" describe findings of ]s, ] and ] in skin samples in small numbers of patients; these findings are contradicted by much larger studies conducted by the CDC, which found skin samples mostly contained ] that came from cotton, with no evidence of infection or other causes.<ref name= UpToDate/>


== Society and culture ==
==Origin of name==
This current condition was named by Mary Leitao of McMurray, PA who has a degree in biology and has worked as a chemist and electron microscope operator, while investigating her son's unexplained rash. She named the condition ''Morgellons'', with a hard ''g'', after a similar condition from the monograph ''A Letter to a Friend'' by Sir ], wherein he describes several medical conditions in his experience, including ''that endemial distemper of children in Languedoc, called the morgellons, wherein they critically break out with harsh hairs on their backs'' . A 1935 paper by British doctor C.E. Kellett identifies the name ''morgellons'' with the ] term ''masclous'', or "little flies" .


==Symptoms== === Mary Leitao ===
In 2001,<ref name="Gazette"/> according to Leitao, her then-two-year-old son developed sores under his lip and began to complain of bugs.<ref name="Primetime">{{cite news |title='Morgellons' Mystery |publisher=ABC News Primetime |date=August 9, 2006 |access-date=August 14, 2007 |url=https://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/Story?id=2283503&page=1}}</ref> Leitao says she examined the sores with her son's toy microscope and discovered red, blue, black, and white fibers.<ref name="Gazette"/><ref name="psychologytoday"/> She states that she took her son to see at least eight different doctors who were unable to find any disease, allergy, or anything unusual about her son's described symptoms. Fred Heldrich, a ] pediatrician with a reputation "for solving mystery cases", examined Leitao's son.<ref name="Gazette">{{cite news | url=http://www.post-gazette.com/local/2006/07/23/Mom-fights-for-answers-on-what-s-wrong-with-her-son/stories/200607230221 | title=Mom fights for answers on what's wrong with her son | first=Chico | last=Harlan | newspaper=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | date=July 23, 2006 |access-date=March 3, 2016}}</ref> Heldrich found nothing abnormal about the boy's skin, and wrote to the referring physician that "Leitao would benefit from a psychiatric evaluation and support", and registered his worry about Leitao's "use" of her son.<ref name="Gazette"/> Leitao last consulted an unnamed Johns Hopkins ] who refused to see her son after reviewing his records, and suggested Leitao herself might have "], a psychiatric syndrome in which a parent pretends a child is sick or makes him sick to get attention from the medical system".<ref name="psychologytoday"/> According to Leitao, several medical professionals she sought out shared this opinion of a potential psychological disorder:<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.texasmonthly.com/preview/2006-10-01/ministerofhealth |archive-url=https://archive.today/20070517171041/http://www.texasmonthly.com/2006-10-01/ministerofhealth.php |archive-date=May 17, 2007 |title=Under my skin |first=Jim |last=Atkinson |publisher=Texas Monthly |date=October 1, 2006 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
The symptoms are frequently characterized as ]es or non-healing skin ] associated with unusual structures that look like granules and filaments, and in particular a burning or itching sensation as if small parasites are crawling on or under the skin. This is usually caused by the sufferer itching or scratching themselves, as is with Delusions of Parasites.


{{blockquote| said she long ago grew accustomed to being doubted by doctors whenever she sought help for her son, who is now seven and still suffering from recurring lesions. "They suggested that maybe I was neurotic," Leitao said. "They said they were not interested in seeing him because I had Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy."<ref name="Witt">{{cite news | title=A mystery ailment gets under skin: The CDC doesn't know what it is, but thousands complain of painful symptoms |first=Howard | last=Witt | work=Chicago Tribune | date=2006-07-25 |url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-148617988.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160409062630/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-148617988.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=2016-04-09}}</ref>}}
When treated as a ] with topical medications, the symptoms return within days and further use of the ] is ineffective.
Leitao says that her son developed more sores, and more fibers continued to poke out of them.<ref name="psychologytoday">{{cite web | url=https://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200702/the-morgellons-mystery |title=The Morgellons Mystery | first=Elizabeth | last=DeVita-Raeburn | publisher=] | date=March–April 2007 | access-date=May 8, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Primetime"/> She and her husband, Edward Leitao, an ], felt their son had "something unknown".<ref name="Gazette"/>


=== Morgellons named ===
Some sufferers have tested positive for ] (borreliosis) and most have ] syndrome. The states with the highest number of reports include ], ], and ]; many sufferers are ]s and ]s. The reasons for these demographics are unknown.
Leitao chose the name ''Morgellons disease'' (with a hard ''g'') from a description of an illness in the medical case-history essay, '']'' (c. 1656, pub. 1690) by Sir ], where the physician describes several medical conditions in his experience, including "that endemial distemper of children in ], called the ''morgellons'', wherein they critically break out with harsh hairs on their backs".<ref name="psychologytoday"/><ref name="browne">{{cite web|url=http://penelope.uchicago.edu/letter/letter.html |title=A Letter to a Friend |author=Sir Thomas Browne |year=1690|publisher=James Eason, University of Chicago }}</ref>


=== Morgellons Research Foundation ===
Some sufferers complain of seeing insects flying in and out of their skin, while others say they have filaments or fibers growing out of their skin. Some of these fibers are microscopic, while others are so large that they can be seen growing with the naked eye.
Leitao started the Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF) informally in 2002 and as an official non-profit in 2004.<ref name="psychologytoday"/><ref name="DallasObserver">{{cite news | url=http://www.dallasobserver.com/2006-07-20/news/the-plague/full | title=The Plague. Bizarre fibers. Black sweat. Bugs under the skin. Welcome to the controversial world of Morgellons disease | first=Jesse | last=Hyde | publisher=Dallas Observer | date=July 20, 2006 }}</ref> The MRF website states that its purpose is to raise awareness and funding for research into the proposed condition, described by the organization as a "poorly understood illness, which can be disfiguring and disabling".<ref name="mrf">{{Cite web|url=https://www.morgellons.org/|title=The Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF)|website=Morgellons Disease ?}}</ref> Leitao stated that she initially hoped to receive information from scientists or physicians who might understand the problem, but instead, thousands of others contacted her describing their sores and fibers, as well as neurological symptoms, fatigue, muscle and joint pain, and other symptoms.<ref name="psychologytoday"/> The MRF claimed to have received self-identified reports of Morgellons from all 50 ]s and 15 other countries, including Canada, the UK, Australia, and the Netherlands. It also claimed that it had been contacted by over 12,000 families.<ref name="mrf"/>


In 2012, the Morgellons Research Foundation closed down and directed future inquiries to the ].<ref name="MRF2012">{{cite web|url=http://morgellons.org/ |title=Morgellons Research Foundation |access-date=April 22, 2012 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419021359/http://www.morgellons.org/ |archive-date=April 19, 2012 }}</ref>
Many of the symptoms are shared, but there is no one symptom that is shared 100% but this is probably due to some cases that actually are something else such as scabies and DOP.


=== Media coverage ===
The actual DOP cases are very difficult to identify among the descriptions of people claiming to have Morgellons because of the similarity in symptoms and behaviors.
In May 2006, a CBS news segment on Morgellons aired in Southern California.<ref name="KCBS News">{{cite news |title= Mysterious Disease Plagues More Southlanders |url=http://cbs2.com/video/?id=18983@kcbs.dayport.com | first=Mary Beth |last=McDade | publisher= ] Broadcasting Inc. |format=video |date=May 22, 2006 |access-date=December 4, 2007}}</ref> The same day, the Los Angeles County Department of Health services issued a statement saying, "No credible medical or public health association has verified the existence or diagnosis of 'Morgellons Disease{{'"}}, and "at this time there is no reason for individuals to panic over unsubstantiated reports of this disease".<ref name="ladhs">{{cite web|url=http://search.ladhs.org/media/docs/Morgellon+Disease.pdf |title=LADHS Statement on Morgellons Disease (archive copy)|publisher=Los Angeles Department of Health Services |date=May 2006 }}{{dead link|date=September 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> In June and July 2006, there were segments on ],<ref name="ZAHN">{{cite news |title=Medical Mystery |publisher=CNN |date=June 23, 2006 }}</ref> ]'s '']'',<ref name="GMA">{{cite news |url=https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/OnCall/story?id=2246987&page=1 |title=Mysterious Skin Disease Causes Itching, Loose Fibers, Morgellons Has Plenty of Skeptics |first=Cynthia |last=McFadden |publisher=Good Morning America|date=July 28, 2006 }}</ref> and ]'s '']''. In August 2006, a segment of the ABC show '']''<ref name="Primetime"/> was devoted to the subject. Morgellons was featured on ]'s '']'' on January 16, 2008,<ref>{{cite news |title=CDC to Investigate Morgellons Mystery |publisher=ABC News |date=January 16, 2008 |access-date=January 20, 2008| url=https://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Health/story?id=4142695&page=1 }}</ref> and as the cover story of the January 20, 2008, issue of '']''.''<ref name="Schulte"/>


The first article to propose Morgellons as a new disease in a scientific journal was a review article co-authored by members of the MRF and published in 2006 by the '']''.<ref name="Allday"/> A 2006 article in the '']'' reported, "There have been no clinical studies" of Morgellons disease.<ref name="Allday">{{cite news |url=http://www.sfgate.com/health/article/Nasty-disease-or-is-it-delusion-Thousands-2495736.php |title=Nasty disease? Or is it delusion? |first=Erin |last=Allday |publisher=San Francisco Chronicle |date=June 2, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071108232714/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2006%2F06%2F02%2FMORGELLONS.TMP |archive-date=November 8, 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> A '']'' article in 2007 also covered the phenomenon, noting that people are reporting similar symptoms in Europe and Australia.<ref name="New S">{{cite news|url=https://www.newscientist.com/channel/health/mg19526210.700-morgellons-disease-the-itch-that-wont-be-scratched.html|title=Morgellons disease: The itch that won't be scratched |first=Daniel |last=Elkan |publisher=New Scientist |issue=2621 |date=September 12, 2007 }}</ref>
Many of the symptoms of this mysterious condition are the same as those of a condition called Delusions of Parasites. This is a serious psychological condition. A sample of the offending "bugs" brought to an entomologists, dermatologist, or physician will only contain bits of lint, dust, or pet hair. People suffering from Morgellons share an affinity for repeatedly trying to prove "something" is on their skin. This is called a "matchbox sign" though matchboxes are very rarely used as containers for the debris, and it is usually in tape or perscription pill bottles.


In an article published in the '']'' on April 22, 2010, singer-songwriter ] claimed to have the condition.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-jonimitchell-20100422,0,6761818.story?page=2&track=rss | work=The Los Angeles Times | title=It's a Joni Mitchell concert, sans Joni}}</ref>
==Controversy and research efforts==
Dr. William Harvey of ] champions the disease as real but few medical professionals agree with him. Many medical professionals dismiss fibers found on patients as lint.


On June 13, 2011, the ]'s ] broadcast ''The Mystery of Morgellons'' with guests including ] Professor Mark Davis.<ref>. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (June 13, 2011). Retrieved January 7, 2012.</ref>
Dr. George Schwartz of ] believes the cause is the bacterium '']'' In his booklet "Lisa's Disease, A Fiber Disease",
he has established four stages to this condition. Stage four places body organs in jeopardy.
This disease is, according to Dr. Schwartz's booklet (currently the only one in existance, though just a compilation of previous literature), a serious, systemic threat. Therefore, he has been willing to conference with patients' doctors and advise them of the protocol he believes will be effective in arresting the symptoms if maintained as longterm antibiotic therapy. To add more controvery to this mystery disease and treatment delemma, it is to be noted that Dr. Schwartz is now involved in a controvery himself regarding perscriptions for addictive drugs and painkillers and he is in jeopardy of his ability to prescribe medications and he is expecting to lose his medical license.


=== CDC investigation ===
The Morgellons Research Foundation coordinated a mailing campaign via their website, in which thousands of people sent ]s to a ] (CDC) task force, which first met in June 2006.<ref name="Schulte"/><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/medical/stories/MYSA072406.morgellons.KENS.1e13fade.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080615040331/http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/medical/stories/MYSA072406.morgellons.KENS.1e13fade.html|archive-date=June 15, 2008|title=CDC considers Texas for Morgellons study |publisher=My San Antonio News |first=Deborah |last=Knapp |date=July 25, 2006 }}</ref><ref name="Time">{{cite news |first=Paige |last=Bowers |url=http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1220349,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060819174346/http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1220349,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=August 19, 2006|title=Itching for Answers to a Mystery Condition |publisher=Time |date=July 28, 2006 }}</ref> By August 2006, the task force consisted of 12 people, including two pathologists, a toxicologist, an ethicist, a mental health expert, and specialists in infectious, parasitic, environmental and chronic diseases.<ref name="CDC Probes">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/08/AR2006080800723.html |title=CDC Probes Bizarre Morgellons Condition |publisher=CBS News |date=August 8, 2006 |first=Mike |last=Stobbe }}</ref>


In June 2007, the CDC started a website relating to Morgellons, ''CDC Study of an Unexplained Dermopathy'', and by November 2007, the CDC opened an investigation into the condition.<ref name="Investigation"/> ], a health-care consortium in Northern California, was chosen to assist with the investigation, which involved skin biopsies from affected people and characterization of foreign material such as fibers or threads obtained from people to determine their potential source.<ref name="Investigation"/><ref>{{cite news |first=Mike |last=Stobbe| url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/health/2008-01-16-2720133778_x.htm|title=U.S. to Study Bizarre Medical Condition |date=January 16, 2008 }}</ref> The U.S. Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and the ] assisted with pathology.<ref name="CDC_AFIP_AAD">{{cite news|url=http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080118/NATION/36179823/1002 |title=CDC enlists military to study skin ailment |first=Jennifer |last=Harper |publisher=The Washington Times |date=January 18, 2008 }}</ref> In January 2012, the CDC released the results of the study.<ref name="CDCPLOS"/><ref name="MSN"/>
The Morgellons Foundation was created in ] by the mother of a child suffering from the condition, and has publicized the lack of research and the lack of doctors' recognizing a disease and how widespread (and therefore) how serious it really is. If the evidence of current studies proves to be valid, Morgellons disease could be found to be the underlying cause of many other diseases ranging from hearing loss to organ failure. There have been ]s related to the disease that current research indicates are due to the overwhelming lack of care and rejection from the many doctors sufferers go to for help, as most doctors recognize the condition as delusions of parasites which is unacceptable to the sufferer and likely indicative of a delusion.


The CDC concluded that 59% of subjects showed ] and 63% had evidence of clinically significant symptoms. They stated that 50% of the individuals had drugs in their systems, and 78% reported exposure to ]s (potential skin irritants). The study detected no parasites or ] in the samples collected from any individuals. Most materials collected from participants' skin were composed of ], likely of cotton origin.<ref name="CDCPLOS"/>
Randy S. Wymore, Ph.D., of the Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences in Tulsa, OK, USA is the current Director of Research at the Morgellons Research Foundation (since spring of 2005). Dr. Wymore is examining the fibers, scabs and other samples from Morgellons patients. To date, the OSU preliminary research suggests that the fibers are not merely textile contaminants and that the scabs have qualitative differences from the scabs of unaffected individuals.


=== Internet and media influence ===
The Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine has assumed a leadership role in Morgellons research. Dr. Wymore believes that in 2006 formal studies with Morgellons patients will begin. The Morgellons Research Foundation has recently published a Case Definition for physicians. One of Dr. Wymore's goals is to identify concrete diagnostic criteria.
An active online community and publications "largely from a single group of investigators" have supported the notion that Morgellons is an infectious disease, and propose an association with ]; these findings are contradicted by the much larger studies conducted by the CDC.<ref name=UpToDate/> People usually self-diagnose Morgellons based on information from the internet and find support and confirmation in online communities of people with similar illness beliefs.<ref name="PsychosomaticsLMS">{{cite journal |doi=10.1176/appi.psy.50.1.90 |pmid=19213978 |title=Morgellons Disease as Internet Meme |journal=Psychosomatics |volume=50 |issue=1 |pages=90 |year=2009 |last1=Lustig |first1=Andrew |last2=MacKay |first2=Sherri |last3=Strauss |first3=John |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="AJPVR"/><ref name="Healy">{{cite news |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2006-nov-13-he-morgellons13-story.html |title=Disease: Real or state of mind? Morgellons sufferers describe wild symptoms of a disorder that many doctors doubt exists |first=Melissa |last=Healy |work=Los Angeles Times |date=November 13, 2006 }}</ref> In 2006, Waddell and Burke reported the influence of the internet on people self-diagnosed with Morgellons: "physicians are becoming more and more challenged by the many persons who attempt self-diagnosis on-line. In many cases, these attempts are well-intentioned, yet wrong, and a person's belief in some of these oftentimes unscientific sites online may preclude their trust in the evidence-based approaches and treatment recommendations of their physician."<ref name="JAADWB">{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.jaad.2006.04.046 |pmid=17052510 |title=Morgellons disease? |journal=Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology |volume=55 |issue=5 |pages=914–915 |year=2006 |last1=Waddell |first1=Andrea G. |last2=Burke |first2=William A. |doi-access=free }}</ref>


Physician Fidel Vila-Rodriguez wrote in a 2008 editorial that the Internet promotes the spreading and supporting of "bizarre" disease beliefs because in online communities, "a belief is not considered delusional if it is accepted by other members of an individual's culture or subculture".<ref name="AJPVR">{{cite journal |doi=10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.08081283 |pmid=19047336 |title=Delusional Parasitosis Facilitated by Web-Based Dissemination |journal=American Journal of Psychiatry |volume=165 |issue=12 |pages=1612 |year=2008 |last1=Vila-Rodriguez |first1=Fidel |last2=MacEwan |first2=Bill G. }}</ref> ], a sociologist who has studied the Morgellons phenomenon, states that the "World Wide Web has become the incubator for mass delusion and it (Morgellons) seems to be a socially transmitted disease over the Internet." According to this hypothesis, people with delusions of parasitosis and other psychological disorders become convinced they have "Morgellons" after reading internet accounts of others with similar symptoms. This phenomenon is known as ], where physical symptoms without an organic cause spread to multiple people within the same community or social group.<ref name="Annapolis">{{cite web |first=Edward |last=McSweegan |url=http://www.hometownannapolis.com/news/col/2007/07/01-25/Pathogens--PeopleInternet-helps-spread-delusion-that-Morgellons-a-disease.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110709190346/http://www.hometownannapolis.com/news/col/2007/07/01-25/Pathogens--PeopleInternet-helps-spread-delusion-that-Morgellons-a-disease.html |archive-date=July 9, 2011 |date=July 1, 2007 |title=Pathogens & People: Internet helps spread delusion that Morgellons a disease |agency=The Capital |publisher=Capital Gazette |location=Annapolis, Maryland}}</ref> The '']'' writes that Morgellons may be ] spread via the internet and mass media, and "f this is the case, then Morgellons is one in a long line of weird diseases that have swept through populations, only to disappear without a trace once public concern subsides".<ref name="DallasObserver"/> The article draws parallels to several media-spread ].
Often sufferers of Morgellons assert that "no one is willing to help" when in fact several physicians, dermatologists, psychologists, entomologists, parasitologists, and pest management professionals have treated them kindly and made efforts to help and try to encourage sufferers to seek psychological assistance. This is held as "rejection" by people with Morgellons.


Dermatologist Caroline Koblenzer specifically faults the Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF) website for misleading people: "Clearly, as more and more of our patients discover this site (MRF), there will be an ever greater waste of valuable time and resources on fruitless research into fibers, fluffs, irrelevant bacteria, and innocuous worms and insects."<ref name="JAAD">{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.jaad.2006.04.043 |pmid=17052516 |title=The challenge of Morgellons disease |journal=Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology |volume=55 |issue=5 |pages=920–922 |year=2006 |last1=Koblenzer |first1=Caroline S. }}</ref> A 2005 '']'' article stated that Morgellons symptoms are well known and characterized in the context of other disorders, and that "widespread reports of the strange fibers date back" only a few years to when the MRF first described them on the Internet.<ref name="Pop">{{cite news |title=Making their skin crawl: people with creepy symptoms find a diagnosis on the Internet. But are they jumping to conclusions? |first=Benjamin |last=Chertoff |publisher=Popular Mechanics |date=June 2005 |page=60 }}</ref> The '']'', in an article on Morgellons, notes that "he recent upsurge in symptoms can be traced directly to the Internet, following the naming of the disease by Mary Leitao, a Pennsylvania mother".<ref name="Healy"/>
Many psychiatrists and psychologists feel that the condition of "Morgellons" and the way to which people with DOP cling to the condition is indicative of the delusion.


In 2008, '']'' reported that internet discussions about Morgellons include many ] about the cause, including ], ], ] and ].<ref name="Schulte"/> '']'' says it "even received pop-culture attention" when it was featured on '']'', adding that "Morgellons patients have further alienated themselves from the mainstream medical community" by "linking Morgellons to another illness viewed skeptically by most doctors, ], and by attacking those who doubt their condition".<ref name=Atlantic>{{cite news |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/01/diagnosis-or-delusion/384206/ |title= Diagnosis or Delusion? |work= The Atlantic |date= January 18, 2015 |access-date= May 20, 2015 |author=Foley K}}</ref>
=== Collembola study ===
A study from ] published in the Journal of the ] co-sponsored by the ] State Department of Health and the ] found 18 of 20 patients self-reporting symptoms of the Morgellons to have infestations by a minute species of ] ] known as ], or ''springtails'' . Studied patients had, in their skin scrapings, collembola eggs often no larger than 100 ]s or juvenile collembola no larger than 300 micrometres. Though many have attempted to replicate these results, it has yet to be done.


=== Collembola study reaction=== == See also ==
* ]
Controversy surrounds the Collembola study. Entomologists, phsyicians, and many others in bug or skin-related professions find the results of the study absurd as the collembolans allegedly identified have no biting mouthparts or burrowing abilities and would be impossible to find in one's skin. Furthermore, the methods and images of the study are generally disregarded as showing any evidence of collembolans.
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


== References ==
Most notably, renowned entomologist Dr. May Berenbaum (professor and head of the Department of Entomology at the University of Illinois) described the images as "difficult to discern." She likened the study to finding the face of the Virgin Mary in a grilled cheese sandwich on Ebay. Dr. Berenbaum is a leading entomologist and an expert in collembola, and she, as well as her colleagues, find great fault in the collembola study.
{{Reflist}}


==External links== ==Further reading==
* {{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1467-9566.2009.01227.x |pmid=20149149 |title=Morgellons: Contested illness, diagnostic compromise and medicalisation |journal=Sociology of Health & Illness |volume=32 |issue=4 |pages=597–612 |year=2010 |last1=Fair |first1=Brian |doi-access=free }}
* - Together, we can find the cure.
* {{cite journal |vauthors=Nunziato CA, Egeland BM, Gurman A, Henry SL |title=Morgellons Disease: The Spread of a Mass Psychogenic Illness via the Internet and Its Implications in Hand Surgery |journal=Hand (N Y) |volume=16 |issue=6 |pages=NP5–NP9 |date=November 2021 |pmid=33435739 |doi=10.1177/1558944720976648 |pmc=8647328 |s2cid=231594436 |url=}}
*
* {{cite journal |vauthors=Shelomi M |title=Evidence of photo manipulation in a delusional parasitosis paper |journal=J. Parasitol. |volume=99 |issue=3 |pages=583–585 |date=June 2013 |pmid=23198757 |doi=10.1645/12-12.1 |s2cid=6473251 |url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233825102}}
* {{Skeptoid | id= 4206| number=206 | title=Morgellons Disease | date= May 18, 2010| access-date=}}


{{Pseudoscience}}
Visit: MorgellonsUSA
{{Delusion}}
http://www.morgellonsusa.com
In order to view 6 pages of vivid Photographic Images from a sufferer in San Diego, CA.


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* Delusory Parsitosis information
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* Delusory Parasitosis
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* Illusions of parasitosis and delusory parasitosis
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* Literature on Delusory Parasitosis
]
* Flu and Delusory Parasitosis
]
* - Morgellons Disease: Is it real?
*

]
]

Latest revision as of 16:51, 24 August 2024

Skin condition of unknown pathology

Morgellons
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Morgellons (/mɔːrˈɡɛlənz/) is the informal name of a self-diagnosed, scientifically unsubstantiated skin condition in which individuals have sores that they believe contain fibrous material. Morgellons is not well understood, but the general medical consensus is that it is a form of delusional parasitosis, on the psychiatric spectrum. The sores are typically the result of compulsive scratching, and the fibers, when analysed, are consistently found to have originated from cotton and other textiles.

The condition was named in 2002 by Mary Leitao, a mother who rejected the medical diagnosis of her son's delusional parasitosis. She chose the name from a letter written by a mid-17th-century physician. Leitao and others involved in her Morgellons Research Foundation successfully lobbied members of the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to investigate the condition in 2006. CDC researchers issued the results of their multi-year study in January 2012, indicating that no disease organisms were present in the samples from the individuals examined and that the fibers found were likely cotton. The researchers concluded that the condition was "similar to more commonly recognized conditions such as delusional infestation".

Medical description

Morgellons is poorly understood but the general medical consensus is that it is a form of delusional parasitosis in which individuals have some form of skin condition with sores that they believe contain fibers. Its presentation is very similar to delusional parasitosis, with the addition that people with the condition believe there are inanimate objects in their skin lesions. An active online community supports the notion that it is an infectious disease, disputes that it is psychological, and proposes an association with Lyme disease. Controversy has resulted; publications "largely from a single group of investigators" describe findings of spirochetes, keratin and collagen in skin samples in small numbers of patients; these findings are contradicted by much larger studies conducted by the CDC, which found skin samples mostly contained cellulose that came from cotton, with no evidence of infection or other causes.

Society and culture

Mary Leitao

In 2001, according to Leitao, her then-two-year-old son developed sores under his lip and began to complain of bugs. Leitao says she examined the sores with her son's toy microscope and discovered red, blue, black, and white fibers. She states that she took her son to see at least eight different doctors who were unable to find any disease, allergy, or anything unusual about her son's described symptoms. Fred Heldrich, a Johns Hopkins pediatrician with a reputation "for solving mystery cases", examined Leitao's son. Heldrich found nothing abnormal about the boy's skin, and wrote to the referring physician that "Leitao would benefit from a psychiatric evaluation and support", and registered his worry about Leitao's "use" of her son. Leitao last consulted an unnamed Johns Hopkins infectious disease specialist who refused to see her son after reviewing his records, and suggested Leitao herself might have "Munchausen's by proxy, a psychiatric syndrome in which a parent pretends a child is sick or makes him sick to get attention from the medical system". According to Leitao, several medical professionals she sought out shared this opinion of a potential psychological disorder:

said she long ago grew accustomed to being doubted by doctors whenever she sought help for her son, who is now seven and still suffering from recurring lesions. "They suggested that maybe I was neurotic," Leitao said. "They said they were not interested in seeing him because I had Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy."

Leitao says that her son developed more sores, and more fibers continued to poke out of them. She and her husband, Edward Leitao, an internist, felt their son had "something unknown".

Morgellons named

Leitao chose the name Morgellons disease (with a hard g) from a description of an illness in the medical case-history essay, A Letter to a Friend (c. 1656, pub. 1690) by Sir Thomas Browne, where the physician describes several medical conditions in his experience, including "that endemial distemper of children in Languedoc, called the morgellons, wherein they critically break out with harsh hairs on their backs".

Morgellons Research Foundation

Leitao started the Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF) informally in 2002 and as an official non-profit in 2004. The MRF website states that its purpose is to raise awareness and funding for research into the proposed condition, described by the organization as a "poorly understood illness, which can be disfiguring and disabling". Leitao stated that she initially hoped to receive information from scientists or physicians who might understand the problem, but instead, thousands of others contacted her describing their sores and fibers, as well as neurological symptoms, fatigue, muscle and joint pain, and other symptoms. The MRF claimed to have received self-identified reports of Morgellons from all 50 U.S. states and 15 other countries, including Canada, the UK, Australia, and the Netherlands. It also claimed that it had been contacted by over 12,000 families.

In 2012, the Morgellons Research Foundation closed down and directed future inquiries to the Oklahoma State University.

Media coverage

In May 2006, a CBS news segment on Morgellons aired in Southern California. The same day, the Los Angeles County Department of Health services issued a statement saying, "No credible medical or public health association has verified the existence or diagnosis of 'Morgellons Disease'", and "at this time there is no reason for individuals to panic over unsubstantiated reports of this disease". In June and July 2006, there were segments on CNN, ABC's Good Morning America, and NBC's The Today Show. In August 2006, a segment of the ABC show Medical Mysteries was devoted to the subject. Morgellons was featured on ABC's Nightline on January 16, 2008, and as the cover story of the January 20, 2008, issue of The Washington Post.

The first article to propose Morgellons as a new disease in a scientific journal was a review article co-authored by members of the MRF and published in 2006 by the American Journal of Clinical Dermatology. A 2006 article in the San Francisco Chronicle reported, "There have been no clinical studies" of Morgellons disease. A New Scientist article in 2007 also covered the phenomenon, noting that people are reporting similar symptoms in Europe and Australia.

In an article published in the Los Angeles Times on April 22, 2010, singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell claimed to have the condition.

On June 13, 2011, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Radio National broadcast The Mystery of Morgellons with guests including Mayo Clinic Professor Mark Davis.

CDC investigation

The Morgellons Research Foundation coordinated a mailing campaign via their website, in which thousands of people sent form letters to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) task force, which first met in June 2006. By August 2006, the task force consisted of 12 people, including two pathologists, a toxicologist, an ethicist, a mental health expert, and specialists in infectious, parasitic, environmental and chronic diseases.

In June 2007, the CDC started a website relating to Morgellons, CDC Study of an Unexplained Dermopathy, and by November 2007, the CDC opened an investigation into the condition. Kaiser Permanente, a health-care consortium in Northern California, was chosen to assist with the investigation, which involved skin biopsies from affected people and characterization of foreign material such as fibers or threads obtained from people to determine their potential source. The U.S. Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and the American Academy of Dermatology assisted with pathology. In January 2012, the CDC released the results of the study.

The CDC concluded that 59% of subjects showed cognitive deficits and 63% had evidence of clinically significant symptoms. They stated that 50% of the individuals had drugs in their systems, and 78% reported exposure to solvents (potential skin irritants). The study detected no parasites or mycobacteria in the samples collected from any individuals. Most materials collected from participants' skin were composed of cellulose, likely of cotton origin.

Internet and media influence

An active online community and publications "largely from a single group of investigators" have supported the notion that Morgellons is an infectious disease, and propose an association with Lyme disease; these findings are contradicted by the much larger studies conducted by the CDC. People usually self-diagnose Morgellons based on information from the internet and find support and confirmation in online communities of people with similar illness beliefs. In 2006, Waddell and Burke reported the influence of the internet on people self-diagnosed with Morgellons: "physicians are becoming more and more challenged by the many persons who attempt self-diagnosis on-line. In many cases, these attempts are well-intentioned, yet wrong, and a person's belief in some of these oftentimes unscientific sites online may preclude their trust in the evidence-based approaches and treatment recommendations of their physician."

Physician Fidel Vila-Rodriguez wrote in a 2008 editorial that the Internet promotes the spreading and supporting of "bizarre" disease beliefs because in online communities, "a belief is not considered delusional if it is accepted by other members of an individual's culture or subculture". Robert Bartholomew, a sociologist who has studied the Morgellons phenomenon, states that the "World Wide Web has become the incubator for mass delusion and it (Morgellons) seems to be a socially transmitted disease over the Internet." According to this hypothesis, people with delusions of parasitosis and other psychological disorders become convinced they have "Morgellons" after reading internet accounts of others with similar symptoms. This phenomenon is known as mass psychogenic illness, where physical symptoms without an organic cause spread to multiple people within the same community or social group. The Dallas Observer writes that Morgellons may be memetically spread via the internet and mass media, and "f this is the case, then Morgellons is one in a long line of weird diseases that have swept through populations, only to disappear without a trace once public concern subsides". The article draws parallels to several media-spread mass delusions.

Dermatologist Caroline Koblenzer specifically faults the Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF) website for misleading people: "Clearly, as more and more of our patients discover this site (MRF), there will be an ever greater waste of valuable time and resources on fruitless research into fibers, fluffs, irrelevant bacteria, and innocuous worms and insects." A 2005 Popular Mechanics article stated that Morgellons symptoms are well known and characterized in the context of other disorders, and that "widespread reports of the strange fibers date back" only a few years to when the MRF first described them on the Internet. The Los Angeles Times, in an article on Morgellons, notes that "he recent upsurge in symptoms can be traced directly to the Internet, following the naming of the disease by Mary Leitao, a Pennsylvania mother".

In 2008, The Washington Post reported that internet discussions about Morgellons include many conspiracy theories about the cause, including biological warfare, nanotechnology, chemtrails and extraterrestrial life. The Atlantic says it "even received pop-culture attention" when it was featured on Criminal Minds, adding that "Morgellons patients have further alienated themselves from the mainstream medical community" by "linking Morgellons to another illness viewed skeptically by most doctors, chronic Lyme disease, and by attacking those who doubt their condition".

See also

References

  1. ^ Vulink, NC (August 23, 2016). "Delusional Infestation: State of the Art". Acta Dermato-Venereologica. 96 (217): 58–63. doi:10.2340/00015555-2412. ISSN 0001-5555. PMID 27282746. Open access icon
  2. ^ Moriarty N, Alam M, Kalus A, O'Connor K (December 2019). "Current understanding and approach to delusional infestation". Am. J. Med. (Review). 132 (12): 1401–1409. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2019.06.017. PMID 31295443. S2CID 195893551.
  3. Beuerlein KG, Balogh EA, Feldman SR (August 2021). "Morgellons disease etiology and therapeutic approach: a systematic review" (PDF). Dermatol Online J. 27 (8). doi:10.5070/D327854682. PMID 34755952. S2CID 243939325.
  4. Aung-Din D, Sahni DR, Jorizzo JL, Feldman SR (November 2018). "Morgellons disease: insights into treatment". Dermatol Online J. 24 (11). doi:10.5070/D32411041998. PMID 30695970.
  5. ^ Suh KN (June 7, 2018). "Delusional infestation: Epidemiology, clinical presentation, assessment and diagnosis". UpToDate. Wolters Kluwer. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
  6. ^ Harlan, Chico (July 23, 2006). "Mom fights for answers on what's wrong with her son". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  7. ^ DeVita-Raeburn, Elizabeth (March–April 2007). "The Morgellons Mystery". Psychology Today. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
  8. ^ Sir Thomas Browne (1690). "A Letter to a Friend". James Eason, University of Chicago.
  9. ^ Schulte, Brigid (January 20, 2008). "Figments of the Imagination?". Washington Post. p. W10. Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  10. ^ "CDC Study of an Unexplained Dermopathy". Centers For Disease Control. November 1, 2007. Archived from the original on June 3, 2016. Retrieved May 9, 2011.
  11. ^ Pearson ML, Selby JV, Katz KA, et al. (2012). "Clinical, Epidemiologic, Histopathologic and Molecular Features of an Unexplained Dermopathy". PLOS ONE. 7 (1): e29908. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...729908P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0029908. PMC 3266263. PMID 22295070. Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Public Domain International License
  12. ^ Aleccia, JoNel (January 25, 2012). "Mystery skin disease Morgellons has no clear cause, CDC study says". NBC News. Retrieved April 2, 2015.
  13. Halvorson, CR (October 2012). "An approach to the evaluation of delusional infestation". Cutis. 90 (4): E1–E4. PMID 24005827.
  14. ^ "'Morgellons' Mystery". ABC News Primetime. August 9, 2006. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
  15. Atkinson, Jim (October 1, 2006). "Under my skin". Texas Monthly. Archived from the original on May 17, 2007.
  16. Witt, Howard (July 25, 2006). "A mystery ailment gets under skin: The CDC doesn't know what it is, but thousands complain of painful symptoms". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on April 9, 2016.
  17. ^ Hyde, Jesse (July 20, 2006). "The Plague. Bizarre fibers. Black sweat. Bugs under the skin. Welcome to the controversial world of Morgellons disease". Dallas Observer.
  18. ^ "The Morgellons Research Foundation (MRF)". Morgellons Disease ?.
  19. "Morgellons Research Foundation". Archived from the original on April 19, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  20. McDade, Mary Beth (May 22, 2006). "Mysterious Disease Plagues More Southlanders" (video). CBS Broadcasting Inc. Retrieved December 4, 2007.
  21. "LADHS Statement on Morgellons Disease (archive copy)" (PDF). Los Angeles Department of Health Services. May 2006.
  22. "Medical Mystery". CNN. June 23, 2006.
  23. McFadden, Cynthia (July 28, 2006). "Mysterious Skin Disease Causes Itching, Loose Fibers, Morgellons Has Plenty of Skeptics". Good Morning America.
  24. "CDC to Investigate Morgellons Mystery". ABC News. January 16, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
  25. ^ Allday, Erin (June 2, 2006). "Nasty disease? Or is it delusion?". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on November 8, 2007.
  26. Elkan, Daniel (September 12, 2007). "Morgellons disease: The itch that won't be scratched". No. 2621. New Scientist.
  27. "It's a Joni Mitchell concert, sans Joni". The Los Angeles Times.
  28. "The mystery of Morgellons". Australian Broadcasting Corporation (June 13, 2011). Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  29. Knapp, Deborah (July 25, 2006). "CDC considers Texas for Morgellons study". My San Antonio News. Archived from the original on June 15, 2008.
  30. Bowers, Paige (July 28, 2006). "Itching for Answers to a Mystery Condition". Time. Archived from the original on August 19, 2006.
  31. Stobbe, Mike (August 8, 2006). "CDC Probes Bizarre Morgellons Condition". CBS News.
  32. Stobbe, Mike (January 16, 2008). "U.S. to Study Bizarre Medical Condition".
  33. Harper, Jennifer (January 18, 2008). "CDC enlists military to study skin ailment". The Washington Times.
  34. Lustig, Andrew; MacKay, Sherri; Strauss, John (2009). "Morgellons Disease as Internet Meme". Psychosomatics. 50 (1): 90. doi:10.1176/appi.psy.50.1.90. PMID 19213978.
  35. ^ Vila-Rodriguez, Fidel; MacEwan, Bill G. (2008). "Delusional Parasitosis Facilitated by Web-Based Dissemination". American Journal of Psychiatry. 165 (12): 1612. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.08081283. PMID 19047336.
  36. ^ Healy, Melissa (November 13, 2006). "Disease: Real or state of mind? Morgellons sufferers describe wild symptoms of a disorder that many doctors doubt exists". Los Angeles Times.
  37. Waddell, Andrea G.; Burke, William A. (2006). "Morgellons disease?". Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 55 (5): 914–915. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2006.04.046. PMID 17052510.
  38. McSweegan, Edward (July 1, 2007). "Pathogens & People: Internet helps spread delusion that Morgellons a disease". Annapolis, Maryland: Capital Gazette. The Capital. Archived from the original on July 9, 2011.
  39. Koblenzer, Caroline S. (2006). "The challenge of Morgellons disease". Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 55 (5): 920–922. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2006.04.043. PMID 17052516.
  40. Chertoff, Benjamin (June 2005). "Making their skin crawl: people with creepy symptoms find a diagnosis on the Internet. But are they jumping to conclusions?". Popular Mechanics. p. 60.
  41. Foley K (January 18, 2015). "Diagnosis or Delusion?". The Atlantic. Retrieved May 20, 2015.

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